
doi: 10.3758/bf03337425
Seventy-four freshmen were asked to judge the concept of social dominance (or social submissiveness) by ranking a set of seven portraits of social scientists and by giving a definition of the concept. Results indicated significantly greater agreement among Ss on ranking portraits under the dominance criterion; also, submissiveness was defined less accurately, suggesting that this concept is not merely a reciprocal version of dominance.
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